jessielovereading
Some melodies cross oceans. Others cross hearts.
When Austrian pianist Anna Schneider arrives at HuaLin Conservatory in Shanghai, she believes music will be the easiest language to speak. She comes with careful plans, disciplined technique, and a future mapped out in clean, orderly lines.
Then she's paired with Rén, an aloof and brilliant erhu player whose silences feel heavier than words.
Their rehearsals are awkward, strained, filled with pauses that stretch too long. But slowly, somewhere between clashing styles and unspoken glances, a fragile harmony begins to form. Music becomes the bridge where language fails, where cultural differences soften into shared rhythm.
As pressure from family, faculty, and their own fears builds, Anna and Rén must decide whether their duet is strong enough to survive expectations, distance, and the risk of trusting another person completely.
A Song Beyond Borders is a tender, slow-burn romance about identity, artistry, and the quiet intimacy of making music together when words are not enough.
Perfect for fans of Do You Like Brahms?, The Oath of Love, and Your Lie in April.
They spoke different languages until the music found a way.
In a city of noise, their duet became the only thing that made sense.
Some feelings can't be translated. Only played.
Out now and available on Amazon and other platforms.